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The tablet also supports the optional Lenovo Precision Pen 2 stylus that comes with 4,096 levels of pressure and tilt detection. It is capable of delivering up to 100 hours of usage through an inbuilt battery of 60mAh capacity. However, Lenovo hasn’t yet announced details about the pricing and availability of the Precision Pen 2 stylus..

You can unsubscribe at any time.Thank you for subscribingWe have more newslettersShow meSee ourprivacy noticeA cancer survivor who was told she had “no chance of conceiving” stunned doctors by going on to give birth to her “miracle” son.Despite beating breast cancer, Alison Watts was devastated after being told her treatment meant her dream of completing her family would not come true.Alison had undergone intensive treatment for breast cancer aged 29 and had gone through the early menopause, and now, doctors had written to her to confirm she had “no realistic chance” of being fertile.But against all odds, Alison and her husband Geoff, 41, fell pregnant naturally with a baby boy, Grayson, a decade later.Now 42, she said: “He is our miracle, the final and perfect piece to our family jigsaw.”Pregnancy after cancer is possible and people should never give up hope. You never know what around the corner and you don know what might happen if you don try.She said: “Cody was just a toddler, almost two and he was playing with my necklace. As I moved his hand to stop him breaking it, I suddenly felt a hard lump and thought what the hell is that.”Alison said she instinctively knew what the lump could mean and arranged a doctor appointment for the very next day.But during that initial appointment she was assured it was nothing to be concerned about as she was low risk due to her age.She was told if she was still worried she could be referred for a check six weeks later.”I just couldn’t wait, maybe it was my gut instinct but I had to know for sure so I had a private consultation and a biopsy later that same week.

Back in June we reported on the black hole that devoured a star and then hurled the x ray energy across billions of light years, right at Earth. It was such a spectacular and unprecedented event, that more studies have been done on the source, known as Swift J1644+57, and the folks at the Goddard Space Flight Center mulitmedia team have produced an animation (above) of what the event may have looked like. Two new papers were published yesterday in Nature; one from a group at NASA studying the data from the Swift satellite and the Japanese Monitor of All sky X ray Image (MAXI) instrument aboard the International Space Station, and the other from scientists using ground based observatories..

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